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Logs reveal Abramoff’s visits to White House

Secret Service records made public Wednesday show that convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff went to the White House twice in the past five years. The White House admits the documents are an incomplete accounting of his meetings with administration officials.
/ Source: The Associated Press

Secret Service records made public Wednesday show that convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff went to the White House twice in the past five years, omitting three other occasions that have been acknowledged by the Bush administration.

The visits occurred on Jan. 20, 2004, the day President Bush delivered his State of the Union address, and on March 6, 2001. Abramoff stayed a total of 63 minutes, 29 seconds, but the records do not indicate where he went in the complex or who he met.

The documents are, by the White House’s acknowledgment, an incomplete accounting of Abramoff’s meetings with administration officials.

Copies of the Secret Service logs were released in connection with a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by the conservative watchdog group Judicial Watch, which had been seeking the records to determine the frequency of Abramoff’s contacts with President Bush and others in his administration.

Judicial Watch said the records appear to be incomplete, noting that similar logs released during the Clinton administration included more details.

“We therefore have reason to believe there are additional details about Jack Abramoff’s visits to the White House that have not been disclosed,” the group’s president, Tom Fitton, said on its Web site.

“However, now we know there are at least two visits by admitted felon Jack Abramoff that the White House must explain. What was Jack Abramoff doing at the White House? With whom did he meet?”

Nothing more found
A letter accompanying the Secret Service logs indicates that the two meetings were all that could be found after a computer-generated search.

Outgoing presidential spokesman Scott McClellan has said that Abramoff attended Hanukkah receptions at the White House in 2001 and 2002, and some additional staff-level meetings.

A May 9, 2001, photo also shows Bush shaking hands with a leader of an American Indian tribe, with Abramoff in the background.

Secret Service spokesman Tom Mazur said the computerized logs have never been considered a complete record of access to the White House and the Old Executive Office Building. Guests arriving for large gatherings often show identification and pass through metal detectors without being issued temporary passes, Mazur said.

“It’s not an all-inclusive record,” Mazur said.

Abramoff pleaded guilty in January in Washington to federal charges stemming from an investigation into his ties with members of Congress and the Bush administration. He also pleaded guilty to fraud charges in Miami concerning a multimillion-dollar purchase of SunCruz Casinos gambling fleet in 2000.